

TheJudiciary City (French:Cité judiciaire) is a site inLuxembourg City, in southernLuxembourg, that houses a number of courts and legal offices. It consolidates all of Luxembourg City's judicial buildings, except those related to the institutions of theEuropean Union, on one site, and greatly expands their capacity.
The City sits on the Saint-Esprit plateau, sandwiched between theAlzette and thePétrusse, in the southern part of the centralVille Hautequarter. Its buildings are built in modernMoselle Baroque, to match the surrounding area, and were designed byRobert Krier. Planned since 1991, the first stone of the City was laid on 7 October 2003, and it was officially inaugurated five years later, on 6 October 2008.[1] The buildings contain 43,000 square metres (460,000 sq ft) of floor space, including 300 offices and sixteen courtrooms.[2]
49°36′29″N6°08′01″E / 49.608°N 6.1335°E /49.608; 6.1335
This article about aLuxembourgish building or structure is astub. You can help Wikipedia byadding missing information. |